Medication patterns in older adults with multimorbidity: a cluster analysis of primary care patients
Full Text
Share
Background: Older adults suffer from various chronic conditions which make them particularly vulnerable. The
proper management of multiple drug use is therefore crucial. The aim of our study was to describe drug
prescription and medication patterns in this population.
Methods: A cross-sectional study in Barcelona (Spain) using electronic health records from 50 primary healthcare
centres. Participants were aged 65 to 94 years, presenting multimorbidity (≥2 chronic diseases), and had been
prescribed at least 1 drug for 6 months or longer during 2009. We calculated the prevalence of prescribed drugs
and identified medication patterns using multiple correspondence analysis and k-means clustering. Analyses were
stratified by sex and age (65–79, 80–94 years).
Results: We studied 164,513 patients (66.8% women) prescribed a median of 4 drugs (interquartile range
[IQR] = 3–7) in the 65–79 age-group and 6 drugs (IQR = 4–8) in the 80–94 age-group. A minimum of 45.9% of
patients aged 65–79 years, and 61.8% of those aged 80–94 years, were prescribed 5 or more drugs. We
identified 6 medication patterns, a non-specific one and 5 encompassing 8 anatomical groups (alimentary
tract and metabolism, blood, cardiovascular, dermatological, musculo-skeletal, neurological, respiratory, and
sensory organ).
Conclusions: Drug prescription is widespread among the elderly. Six medication patterns were identified, 5 of
which were related to one or more anatomical group, with associations among drugs from different systems.
Overall, guidelines do not accurately reflect the situation of the elderly multimorbid, new strategies for
managing multiple drug uses are needed to optimize prescribing in these patients